Bogart v. Cowboy State Bank & Trust Co.

182 S.W. 678, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1308
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 30, 1915
DocketNo. 747.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 182 S.W. 678 (Bogart v. Cowboy State Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bogart v. Cowboy State Bank & Trust Co., 182 S.W. 678, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1308 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinions

Several parties and issues were involved in this suit, but the only appeal is by A. R. Bogart and wife from that part of the judgment denying them the right to their homestead of 200 acres out of certain lands *Page 680 upon which liens were foreclosed. It will therefore not be necessary to make a full statement of the pleadings and facts. The Cowboy State Bank Trust Company sued on a note signed by A. R. and W. R. Bogart, executed May 2, 1911, in the sum of $7,251, due November 2d following, and stipulating for 10 per cent. interest from maturity and 10 per cent. attorneys' fees. Appellee Bank Trust Company also prayed for foreclosure of a deed of trust lien on certain lands in Kent county given to secure said note and executed about four months after the date of the note.

The National Stock Yards Bank of Ft. Worth intervened and prayed for judgment upon a note for $1,000 against the same parties, which was secured by deed of trust on part of the lands described in the first-named deed. The interest of this intervener was afterwards acquired by the Ft. Worth National Bank, which on July 28, 1914, also filed a plea of intervention, praying judgment upon a note for $1,500, executed by A. R. Bogart to F. P. Shultz, and indorsed by Shultz, without recourse, to the Cowboy State Bank Trust Company. This note was secured by deed of trust upon all of the land in controversy. This note was, after its execution, indorsed by the Cowboy Bank Trust Company to the Ft. Worth National Bank. The Ft. Worth National Bank also sought to recover upon a note for $7,460, which was alleged to be a renewal of and substitution for the first above described note for $7,251. Several individuals were made parties to the suit and their rights determined by the judgment, but, since there is no complaint upon their part, it is not necessary to state the issues adjudicated as to them. As stated above, A. R. Bogart and wife claimed 200 acres as a homestead out of the land upon which the deeds of trust were given. The Ft. Worth National Bank held the notes secured by the deeds of trust as collateral for a debt of $5,560.60, due it by the Cowboy State Bank Trust Company. The $1,500 note above mentioned represented part of the purchase money for all the lands involved. That portion of the judgment of which complaint is made is as follows:

"(10) It further appearing to the court that the defendants. A. R. Bogart and wife. Ethel Bogart, have no homestead right in or claim to any of the above-described lands, it is therefore, ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that said named defendants take nothing on their plea here, it being approved and adjudged by the court that the two hundred acres so claimed by them and described in their pleadings herein is subject to all of the liens found in favor of the interveners. Ft. Worth Notional Bank and the Stock Yards National Bank."

By their first assignment of error, appellants insist that the court erred in refusing to find as a fact that a certain indorsement on the note for $7,251 was made by the Cowboy State Bank Trust Company more than two months subsequent to its maturity, and that therefore the Ft. Worth National Bank could not be an innocent purchaser of said note for a valuable consideration before maturity.

Judgment was not rendered upon the original note, but upon the renewal. It is therefore immaterial when the Ft. Worth National Bank acquired the original note, if it obtained the renewal for value without notice before its maturity. The failure of the trial court to find upon an immaterial issue is not reversible error.

Under the second assignment appellants complain of the refusal of the court to find that no money was advanced to Bogart and wife when the deed of trust dated October 19, 1912, was executed to secure the original note dated May 2d 1911. Appellants assert in their assignment that this was a material finding. The deed of trust itself recites that it is given to secure the original note, and, so far as we are able to see, no claim is made by any of the appellees that the lien was given to secure any other debt. It is true that the deed of trust recites that it should be a security for any indebtedness thereafter accruing, but no proof was made of any further indebtedness. The pleadings of the parties set out without contradiction the debt it was given to secure, and no witness seems to have denied it. We think, upon a fair construction of the twelfth finding, the court has fully complied with the request of appellees on this point.

The third assignment is also without merit, since the court, in its seventh finding of fact, has stated fully the matters which appellants requested to be found.

October 12, 1912, Bogart was duly adjudged a bankrupt, and the decree discharging him was entered June 7, 1913. The federal court set apart to him and his wife in that proceeding, the 200 acres as a homestead. The evidence does not show whether Bogart did or did not schedule appellee's debts, and the Ft. Worth National Bank had no actual notice of the bankruptcy proceedings. Under this state of facts the debtor of course could not be discharged from liability upon appellees' claims.

Since appellee was not a party to the bankruptcy proceedings, it is not bound by the decree of the federal court setting aside to Bogart and wife the land as a homestead.

The rule is that exempt property is never really in the bankruptcy court, nor is the owner divested of his title where he properly urges his claim for exemption. The court has no jurisdiction of it except to set it aside as exempt property. The rights of lien creditors with reference to it must be determined in the state courts. First Remington on Bankruptcy, §§ 1022, 1024; 1 Loveland on Bankruptcy, p. 88; Brooks v. Eblen (Ky.)106 S.W. 308, and authorities there cited.

By the remaining assignments, save one, appellants assail the action of the court in *Page 681 foreclosing the deed of trust dated October 19, 1911, upon that portion of the land designated by them as a homestead, and insist that the court erred in its finding of fact bearing upon this issue, and that the conclusions of law are neither supported by the findings nor by the evidence adduced. We will dispose of these assignments by a general discussion of the rules of law applicable to the facts rather than by a consideration of the assignments in detail.

Bogart and wife used the land in controversy as a homestead for several years prior to September 1, 1910. It was shown without controversy in behalf of appellees that on the last-named date Bogart leased the entire 1,470 acres, including the homestead, to one Roy for a period of five years; that on or about the 1st of October following he moved with his family to New Mexico, where three months later he purchased a small farm of 120 acres, upon which he resided and made a crop in 1911, and rendered the premises for taxes. After residing there nine months he sold the farm, his vendee assuming the unpaid purchase money, and moved to El Paso county, Tex., where he has since worked for wages for his father-in-law. That the deed of trust was executed October 19, 1911, following the sale of his New Mexico farm; that the sale was made several days before the execution of the deed of trust, but was not duly conveyed until October 18, 1911. The deed of trust contains a recital disclaiming any homestead interest in or to any of the 1,470 acres, but describes no property in that portion of the instrument left blank in the printed form for that purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
182 S.W. 678, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bogart-v-cowboy-state-bank-trust-co-texapp-1915.